1 / 21

A Pain in the Neck, on Ice with a Twist...

Dr Darren Lillis. A Pain in the Neck, on Ice with a Twist. The Case. Mr HS 52 yrs old Shopkeeper Normally fit and well GP referral with neck and upper back pain. HxPC. Fell on the ice 4 weeks previously Stepping down off a foot bridge, his two feet went out from under him

livana
Télécharger la présentation

A Pain in the Neck, on Ice with a Twist...

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dr Darren Lillis A Pain in the Neck, on Ice with a Twist...

  2. The Case • Mr HS • 52 yrs old • Shopkeeper • Normally fit and well • GP referral with neck and upper back pain

  3. HxPC • Fell on the ice 4 weeks previously • Stepping down off a foot bridge, his two feet went out from under him • Landed on his sacrum • Felt a “shudder” transmitted from his sacrum to his neck on impact

  4. HxPC continued • No loss of power or sensation in limbs • Got himself off the ground, walked home. • Went to work over the following 2 weeks • Ongoing lower cervical and upper thoracic pain Went to his GP Emergency Dept

  5. PMHx etc • Appendectomy as child • No other relevant history • No medications or allergies • Lives with wife, non smoker, no alcohol • Full time employment

  6. On examination • Kyphotic posture • Fixed flexion deformity in his C spine • Chin- chest distance= 5cm • Unable to flex his neck laterally • Only able to rotate approx 10 degrees R+L • Stated this was normal for him- no recent change associated with the fall

  7. Examination condt • Tender over the lower cervical and upper thoracic regions- bone and muscular tenderness • Neuro examination was entirely normal

  8. ED Management • Soft tissue injury • Analgesia • Physio • Discharge • Call from radiology- C spine fracture

  9. Correct Diagnosis • C Spine fracture- C 6/7 fracture • X rays and posture in keeping undiagnosed Ankylosing Spondylitis

  10. Admitted under Orthopedics • Further investigation

  11. Treatment • No Miami J Cervical collar • No spinal precautions • Transferred to the Mater Spinal Unit once a bed became available • Reviewed by Rheumatology- Likely Ank Spond but inflammatory markers normal... burnt out

  12. AnkylosingSpondylitis and C Spine fractures • Inflammatory arthropathy • Ligaments and discs become calicified- characteristic flexed posture, loss of flexibility • Incidence of spinal fractures is 4 times that of the normal population (1) • 75% of these occur in the lower C Spine region (2) • Multi level fractures associated with minor trauma (3)

  13. References 1. Amamilo SC (1989) Fractures of the cervical spine in patients with ankylosing spondylitis. Orthop Rev 18:339–344 2. Hunter T, Dubo HIC (1983) Spinal fractures complicating ankylosingspondylitis. A long-term follow up study. Arthritis Rheum 26:751–759 3. J. Mountney, A. J. Murphy, J. L. Fowler Lessons learned from cervical pseudoarthrosis in ankylosingspondylitis. EurSpine J (2005) 14: 689–693

  14. Take home message • C7 on T1, Peg and clear AP C Spine views should be attained • Further images should be attained using arm pull, swimmers views or CT

More Related